ie8 fix
Click Here

Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

NBC To Internet: TV Is Still King

By | September 22, 2008, 12:47pm PDT

If NBC had to choose a single platform on which to base its business for the next five years, it wouldn’t be the Internet or mobile phones. “Sorry, guys, it would be television,” the president of NBC Universal research said Monday.

That is the conclusion of NBC’s Alan Wurtzel, speaking the Interactive Advertising Bureau’s MIXX Conference & Expo, held in conjunction with Advertising Week 2008 in the home of the “Mad Men,” New York.

The comment led off Wurtzel’s examination of the results of NBC’s “billion-dollar research lab” on cross-media usage: the 2008 Beijing Olympics held last month.

When all was said and done, 90% of all consumption of Olympics content came on the television set, he said. And NBC snared 93% of all TV viewing.

All told, 214 million different people watched the Olympics on NBC’s television networks. By comparison, 51.8 million different people came to its web site, NBCOlympics.com.

But here’s the interesting stat: Internet users are the most desirable TV viewers.  People who only consumed the Olympics on television spent 3 hours and 26 minutes with the games. Those folks who also spent time on the Internet for games information or watching wound up spending an average of 6 hours and 57 minutes with the TV coverage of the Olympics. Twice as much time, as the TV-only viewer.

There is “absolutely zero cannibalization” of TV viewing by Internet viewing, Wurtzel said.

Some other stats:

* 10 million hours of streaming video were served to Internet viewers

* 1.3 billion page views were sent to Internet readers

* 6.5 million people accessed some piece of Olympics coverage by mobile handset

* 82% of the Olympics audience watched only on TV; only 0.3% watched only on the Internet. Eighteen percent watched on both

* The Internet audience was 7% as big as the TV audience at the 2006 Winter Olympics. This year, the Internet audience was 24% of the size of the TV audience.

Besides watching more TV, Internet users also absorb ad messages better than  TV-only viewers. Brands are recalled by only 35% of TV-only viewers, 46% by those who watched both on the Internet and TV. Messages were recalled by 27% of the TV-only viewers, 38% by those who took in the games on both the Internet and TV.

If anything really got viewers charged up, it was not what they saw on the computer screen. It was the clarity of pictures on high-definition television sets. “High def (is the) killer app,” Wurtzel said, in 2008. “People always default to the best viewing experience.”

If deliverers of video over the Internet were to get any advice from the president of NBC Universal research, it would be to keep it simple. Make it as easy to find, launch and view video as possible. Think the NBC-Fox operated Hulu broadband video network, the Google home page or the Apple iPhone.

In fact, if you want a big TV-like audience on the Web, think about reaching the average TV-channel clicker. Not the geek.

Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily e-mail newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.

Topics

Tom Steinert-Threlkeld is editor-in-chief of Securities Industry News, as well as a long-time media, technology and business journalist.

Disclosure

Tom Steinert-Threlkeld

Tom Steinert-Threlkeld has interests in two Web startups, which he cannot disclose until formally launched. They do not involve enterprise computing. He holds interests in technology companies only through mutual funds in which he has no say in their selection of investments. He has worked for Reed Elsevier PLC, Ziff Davis Media and the A.H. Belo Corporation.

Biography

Tom Steinert-Threlkeld

Tom Steinert-Threlkeld is editor-in-chief of Securities Industry News, as well as a long-time media, technology and business journalist.

He experimented with online news delivery a quarter century ago, with a text-only online service called StarText at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram in Texas.

Related Discussions on TechRepublic

Did you know you can take part in these discussions with your ZDNet membership?
10
Comments

Join the conversation!

Just In

RE: NBC To Internet: TV Is Still King
jackson1984-24316069205748857739440257893812 11th Oct
Wonderful to be planning to your blog site web page when football jersey much more, it is been months for me. Evidently this text that i've been waited for so prolonged.
0 Votes
+ -
yeah..
bjorn@... 22nd Sep 2008
that's probably because they didn't make full video available.
And 5 years is not what they should be thinking about.
0 Votes
+ -
I watch the traffic channel
BALTHOR 22nd Sep 2008
PBS is bugs,alligators and squalor.
0 Votes
+ -
Too bad the Olympics website SUCKED. I visited it a few times to try and watch, but they didnt use it to anywhere near its full potential - thus they forced people to watch it online. Quite sad really.

But you can really thank Comcast for this...and the 250GB cap.
0 Votes
+ -
Without Silverlight
pointzerotwo@... Updated - 23rd Sep 2008
Without the Silverlight requirement for the Olympics they would have had at least one more online viewer, who would have spent way too many hours every day following the non-prime-time events (Mt. biking, kayaking, fencing, etc.). I just didn't want to start the install/patch/update routine for yet another plug-in on all my browsers for a one time event.

As it was, I only got to see whatever was on TV between 9 and 10 pm, which was pretty much just the typical gymnastics, diving, and Phelps.

What I'd really like to see is events or shows published as generic podcasts (with ads of course) that I can view on my Apple TV or anywhere.
0 Votes
+ -
Yeah but..
@ShaneX 23rd Sep 2008
Did you read the last line of this article? The guy says what should be focused on to get the really high numbers online is the every day viewer, not the geek.

And your excuse is geek-ified, so very few people (relatively) would even care that it's "silverlight". What goes through there head is "oh, I have to click here to watch this? OK!".

Not to mention, sure it was a one time even, but it was 3 weeks! 3 weeks, in my book, is worth taking the 3 minutes to install a legitimate plug-in, even if you require another 1.5 minutes afterwards to remove it.
0 Votes
+ -
RE: NBC To Internet: TV Is Still King
D T Schmitz 22nd Sep 2008
Sunday Night NFL on nbcsports.msnbc.com is a good example of where TV viewing may be in five years.

Nothing but net.
0 Votes
+ -
When do I watch TV on the Internet?
sgtgary@... 22nd Sep 2008
There are two main times I watch TV on the Internet...
1. As a DVR. If I can catch the latest showing of Heroes on the network website, then I don't have to wait until I get home and watch a marathon of recorded tv shows (most of which I'll skip the advertisements), and
2. When I'm working nightshift as a network operator. We don't have TV but we do have capability to stream video from just about any Internet site.

There's plenty of revenue to be had if "they" stop considering one OR the other... both compliment each other
0 Votes
+ -
I'm confused. The Internet is a way of transmitting bits from one computer to another. It's not an entertainment network that creates content. Why would NBC worry about something that isn't the same? GM doesn't worry about competition from a company that paves airport runways.

The real problem for all the broadcasters is that the Internet was founded on the need to get free long distance telephone calls so that modem-based UUCP e-mail messages would be cheap from Stanford to Cornell University. This urge for free service is more a problem form at&t, the phone company whose policies caused the Internet in the first place.
0 Votes
+ -
Here's what I don't get. If you are broadcasting on the
public airwaves, the program is free anyway. Why not
stream it on the internet, with the best quality available,
and add the advertisements.

If you are a cable company, I can see why you might not
want to stream it free in the internet.

But, on a distantly related subject. I think the regular
networks should be adding great content to their extra
digital channels. The more people that decide to just use
their television antenna, the better off they will be. Think
about it, by giving those people more of what they want,
they have an audience with much fewer choices. They will
probably be watching their network!
0 Votes
+ -
RE: NBC To Internet: TV Is Still King
jackson1984-24316069205748857739440257893812 11th Oct
Wonderful to be planning to your blog site web page when football jersey much more, it is been months for me. Evidently this text that i've been waited for so prolonged.

Join the conversation!

Formatting +
BB Codes - Note: HTML is not supported in forums
  • [b] Bold [/b]
  • [i] Italic [/i]
  • [u] Underline [/u]
  • [s] Strikethrough [/s]
  • [q] "Quote" [/q]
  • [ol][*] 1. Ordered List [/ol]
  • [ul][*] · Unordered List [/ul]
  • [pre] Preformat [/pre]
  • [quote] "Blockquote" [/quote]
ie8 fix

The best of ZDNet, delivered

ZDNet Newsletters

Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox

Facebook Activity

White Papers, Webcasts, & Resources
ie8 fix